logo
Artificial intelligence consumes massive amounts of energy. Here's why

Artificial intelligence consumes massive amounts of energy. Here's why

LeMonde21 hours ago

"Our GPUs [graphics processing units] are melting. We are going to temporarily introduce some rate limits." Just two days after OpenAI added a new image generation feature to ChatGPT, on March 25, CEO Sam Altman openly admitted the company was overwhelmed. Users were rushing to test the new ability to transform photos into different styles of art using artificial intelligence technology, especially in the characteristic style of Studio Ghibli, the Japanese animation studio founded by artist and filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki. On March 31, Altman announced that one million new users had signed up for ChatGPT in just one hour. The day after, he acknowledged that ChatGPT faced the risk of service slowing down, or even outages.
The sequence highlighted the enormous energy drain represented by generative AI technology. AI's explosive growth is now expected to more than double global electricity demand from data centers by 2030. According to an April report from the International Energy Agency (IEA), the demand could reach around 945 terawatt-hours (Twh), surpassing the current total electricity consumption of Japan. By that time, data centers will consume just under 3% of the world's electricity, it found. "In the United States, power consumption by data centers is on course to account for almost half of the growth in electricity demand between now and 2030," the IEA wrote.
Data center projects have been proliferating in the US. Donald Trump announced the launching of Stargate, a project with a $500 billion package of public and private funds that has already provided for the construction of up to 10 new data centers. Proving the point that energy is a core challenge in AI development, Meta and Microsoft have planned to connect their data centers directly to nuclear power plants. These projects anticipate that AI technology will achieve the success that has been predicted in the coming years. Indeed, now that AI models are integrated into Bing, WhatsApp, and, soon, Google, they will be included in every app on our phones, raising significant questions about their environmental impact.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Big tech on a quest for ideal AI device
Big tech on a quest for ideal AI device

France 24

time13 hours ago

  • France 24

Big tech on a quest for ideal AI device

The ability to engage digital assistants as easily as speaking with friends is being built into eyewear, speakers, computers and smartphones, but some argue that the Age of AI calls for a transformational new gizmo. "The products that we're using to deliver and connect us to unimaginable technology are decades old," former Apple chief design officer Jony Ive said when his alliance with OpenAI was announced. "It's just common sense to at least think, surely there's something beyond these legacy products." Sharing no details, OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman said that a prototype Ive shared with him "is the coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seen." According to several US media outlets, the device won't have a screen, nor will it be worn like a watch or broach. Kyle Li, a professor at The New School, said that since AI is not yet integrated into people's lives, there is room for a new product tailored to its use. The type of device won't be as important as whether the AI innovators like OpenAI make "pro-human" choices when building the software that will power them, said Rob Howard of consulting firm Innovating with AI Learning from flops The industry is well aware of the spectacular failure of the AI Pin, a square gadget worn like a badge packed with AI features but gone from the market less than a year after its debut in 2024 due to a dearth of buyers. The AI Pin marketed by startup Humane to incredible buzz was priced at $699. Now, Meta and OpenAI are making "big bets" on AI-infused hardware, according to CCS Insight analyst Ben Wood. OpenAI made a multi-billion-dollar deal to bring Ive's startup into the fold. Google announced early this year it is working on mixed-reality glasses with AI smarts, while Amazon continues to ramp up Alexa digital assistant capabilities in its Echo speakers and displays. Apple is being cautious embracing generative AI, slowly integrating it into iPhones even as rivals race ahead with the technology. Plans to soup up its Siri chatbot with generative AI have been indefinitely delayed. The quest for creating an AI interface that people love "is something Apple should have jumped on a long time ago," said Futurum research director Olivier Blanchard. Time to talk Blanchard envisions some kind of hub that lets users tap into AI, most likely by speaking to it and without being connected to the internet. "You can't push it all out in the cloud," Blanchard said, citing concerns about reliability, security, cost, and harm to the environment due to energy demand. "There is not enough energy in the world to do this, so we need to find local solutions," he added. Howard expects a fierce battle over what will be the must-have personal device for AI, since the number of things someone is willing to wear is limited and "people can feel overwhelmed." A new piece of hardware devoted to AI isn't the obvious solution, but OpenAI has the funding and the talent to deliver, according to Julien Codorniou, a partner at venture capital firm 20VC and a former Facebook executive. OpenAI recently hired former Facebook executive and Instacart chief Fidji Simo as head of applications, and her job will be to help answer the hardware question. Voice is expected by many to be a primary way people command AI. Google chief Sundar Pichai has long expressed a vision of "ambient computing" in which technology blends invisibly into the world, waiting to be called upon. "There's no longer any reason to type or touch if you can speak instead," Blanchard said. "Generative AI wants to be increasingly human" so spoken dialogues with the technology "make sense," he added.

Artificial intelligence consumes massive amounts of energy. Here's why
Artificial intelligence consumes massive amounts of energy. Here's why

LeMonde

time21 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Artificial intelligence consumes massive amounts of energy. Here's why

"Our GPUs [graphics processing units] are melting. We are going to temporarily introduce some rate limits." Just two days after OpenAI added a new image generation feature to ChatGPT, on March 25, CEO Sam Altman openly admitted the company was overwhelmed. Users were rushing to test the new ability to transform photos into different styles of art using artificial intelligence technology, especially in the characteristic style of Studio Ghibli, the Japanese animation studio founded by artist and filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki. On March 31, Altman announced that one million new users had signed up for ChatGPT in just one hour. The day after, he acknowledged that ChatGPT faced the risk of service slowing down, or even outages. The sequence highlighted the enormous energy drain represented by generative AI technology. AI's explosive growth is now expected to more than double global electricity demand from data centers by 2030. According to an April report from the International Energy Agency (IEA), the demand could reach around 945 terawatt-hours (Twh), surpassing the current total electricity consumption of Japan. By that time, data centers will consume just under 3% of the world's electricity, it found. "In the United States, power consumption by data centers is on course to account for almost half of the growth in electricity demand between now and 2030," the IEA wrote. Data center projects have been proliferating in the US. Donald Trump announced the launching of Stargate, a project with a $500 billion package of public and private funds that has already provided for the construction of up to 10 new data centers. Proving the point that energy is a core challenge in AI development, Meta and Microsoft have planned to connect their data centers directly to nuclear power plants. These projects anticipate that AI technology will achieve the success that has been predicted in the coming years. Indeed, now that AI models are integrated into Bing, WhatsApp, and, soon, Google, they will be included in every app on our phones, raising significant questions about their environmental impact.

Google turns internet queries into conversations
Google turns internet queries into conversations

France 24

time2 days ago

  • France 24

Google turns internet queries into conversations

With Audio Overviews, Gemini AI models quickly sum up query results in conversational style, according to Google. "An audio overview can help you get a lay of the land, offering a convenient, hands-free way to absorb information whether you're multitasking or simply prefer an audio experience," Google said in a blog post. "We display helpful web pages right within the audio player on the search results page so you can easily dive in and learn more." Google is beefing up online search with generative artificial intelligence, embracing AI despite fears for its ad-based business model. CEO Sundar Pichai recently unveiled a new AI mode in Google search. The search engine's nascent AI mode goes further than AI Overviews which display answers to queries from the tech giant's generative AI powers above the traditional blue links to websites and ads. Since Google debuted AI Overviews in search slightly more than a year ago, it has grown to more than 1.5 billion users across several countries, according to Pichai. Google's push into generative AI comes amid intensifying competition with OpenAI's ChatGPT, which has itself incorporated search engine features into its popular chatbot.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store